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Y hg predictions by Wang et al. 2015
Topic Started: Aug 11 2005, 11:48:03 PM (157 Views)
black man
The Right Hand
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Chadong and Mulam C* (reference "63": Deng 2013): C*
Korean D* (reference "15": Park 2012): D2 (i.e., in accordance with the findings of Kim et al. 2011)
Afghanistani (Uzbek, Hazara and Tajik) N* (reference "7": Haber 2012): once N-M46+, twice N-M178+
Japanese N* from all over Japan (reference "21": Mizuno 2010): mostly N-LLY22g-
Korean N* (n=26) (reference "15": Park 2012): 16 times N-LLY22g-, 8 times N-M178+
Korean N* (n=40) (reference "19": Kim 2011, "O2b" paper): 13 times different variants of N-M178+, 12 times N-LLY22g-, rest: 15
Afghanistani O* (5 Tajiks, 1 Baloch, 1 Hazara) (reference "7": Haber 2012): mostly O3
HM and MK O* (reference "52": Cai 2011, n=47): 19 times O2; rest: 28
Pinghua (reference "53, 54": Gan 2008, Lu 2013), n=13): O1: 7 times; O*: thrice; O2, O3 and Q: once each

=> Note that more than 20% of the men of the Pinghua sample from Pingguo have the M110+ mutation. Moreover, M101+ occurs in Pingguo, Nanning and Tiandong Pinghua samples, and M119+, M101-, M110- does so in the Tiandong and Pingguo samples of Lu et al. 2013. If those O* samples are in y hg O1, too, that will mean that they four different types of O1 clusters at least. Y hg O2a is nevertheless more important among Pinghua-speakers.

Source:
Wang et al. 2015: Convergence of Y Chromosome STR Haplotypes
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